Hace 40 años........en ese entonces este nivel de música, que cantaba por si sola, era irrepetible....
@jaybee159716 күн бұрын
A classic jazz masterpiece!🎶
@user-kv4fe5do7h23 күн бұрын
In the top 3 greatest albums ever Black Rose Thin Lizzy phew Phill and Gary,,,,, other two Robin Trower Bidge of Sighs and Jimi Hendrix Axis Bold as love,,,,, not too far behind bob dylan blonde on blonde genesis foxtrot Danny Gatton un finished business Steely Dan Royal Scam,,,, 😂 err any comments please,,,, 😂Phil lynotts lyrics poetry and sheer humanity with Gary Scott n Brian Phew ,, Well done from Andrew Warrington blues club x leave you with this line With Love x x
@BombusMonticolaАй бұрын
A favourite of mine.
@michaelcedillos224Ай бұрын
Canta Seiko Chan❤
@lionelthiebaud7081Ай бұрын
Adieu immense pianiste Maurizio Pollini, je vous remercie et vous adore encore et toujours
@peter494Ай бұрын
Always loved this. Great album.
@JihyoreganoАй бұрын
La sacaron de Spotify?
@gwessfr14 күн бұрын
i think they did :( I was trying to find it
@williamglass7806Ай бұрын
man, that is one hell of a song.
@jarednance26142 ай бұрын
Very unconventional music concept; Paradoxical in that it has strong roots in Romantic tradition and actually quite whimsical and searching. It represents a challenge, creatively and intellectually. In my opinion the finest interpreters pianistically are Pollini , Steuermann, and Gould
@josevasques82612 ай бұрын
Extraordinary.
@davidclavers24352 ай бұрын
Exceptionnel ❤
@nonickname50122 ай бұрын
Abbadoは例によってこのコンチェルトをも暗譜していたんでしょう。
@jesusalexander99842 ай бұрын
Muchas gracias hermano, esta canción me trae tantos recuerdos de una época tan linda de la vida, gracias
@DA3N332 ай бұрын
Marcello e Monica❤
@jepark5652 ай бұрын
29:56 so beautiful
@offramp12203 ай бұрын
学生だった当時FMでたまたま聴いたサンロレンツォに衝撃を覚えその週末に速攻でアルバムを買った。収録されてる全曲の素晴らしい仕上がりにとにかく驚かされた。そしてこのApril Joy を初めて聴いた時には本当に感動した。特にイントロ Mark Egan の印象的なフレットレスベースが好きで何度も何度も繰り返し聴いていた。あれからもう45年... 遠い昔だけど昨日のことのように鮮明に覚えている。PMGの音楽とリアルタイムで出会えて本当にラッキーだったと思う。
@morrisanderson31803 ай бұрын
the bass from jack bruce is really off the scale.
@jesuscruz61063 ай бұрын
I can’t found on spotify 😢
@kevinsaid12173 ай бұрын
The song was on Spotify along with part 2 of the song, but they removed them, I have no idea why. :(
@2roops992 ай бұрын
its back now 🙏🙏
@kevinsaid12172 ай бұрын
@@2roops99 OMG FR?
@corra72493 ай бұрын
Che meraviglia...
@annabruzzolo75703 ай бұрын
Musica e vita eterna e la stessa cosa…
@caramelgirl69963 ай бұрын
I was in a beautiful small town in Italy for the first time and I wanted to listen to this beautiful composition but couldn’t find it on Spotify anymore 😢
@kounomai52484 ай бұрын
Buon viaggio, Maestro Pollini.
@kounomai52484 ай бұрын
Buon viaggio, Maestro Pollini.
@albertodellalibera80564 ай бұрын
Pollini Abbado n.1❤
@bcdlee67314 ай бұрын
Long live the Pollini!
@MsFrancescaF4 ай бұрын
He died today. 😢
@kounomai52484 ай бұрын
@@MsFrancescaF A legend that will live on forever.😥
@PeterGujamusic5 ай бұрын
Awesome
@user-hn7pr5or5n5 ай бұрын
懐かしいですね。 久しぶりで、小学生高学年の頃をおもいだします。😂
@penerjemah105 ай бұрын
They remove it from spotify Why ??
@kounomai52485 ай бұрын
I don't know why. Here's hoping we can keep listening.
@allamgomez39884 ай бұрын
I wonder what happened?
@caramelgirl69963 ай бұрын
Yes I also noticed that
@kevinsaid12173 ай бұрын
for real 😭
@Girlidkbye6763 ай бұрын
@@kounomai5248literally thank you so much for uploading it in here, I love this song, Spotify really disappointed
@emirmuraticel27325 ай бұрын
One of the Best and fascinating album of the one and only PMG . I salute the masters who introduced music beyond what was out there back in late seventies. Versatile drummer Danny gottlieb and bass player Mark egan along with Pat metheny and Lyle mays created real music. I have been listening to them since 1978 and there has not been a single day in my life without them . RIP Lyle and Nana. You will never be forgotten .
One of my favorite groups ever regardless of genre!!!! I remember when this project came out and I was on my weekly trek in Tower Records in Hollywood and saw this cassette in the Jazz section. I'd never heard of the group and wondered if this cassette was in the wrong section because these dudes looked like a rock band! As was my custom, I took a chance buying albums and cassettes by groups I'd never heard of and picked this up. When I played the cassette in my car on the way back home, MY MIND WAS BLOWN!!!!! I found out that The Pat Metheny Group was going to be in concert at The Roxy in Hollywood and bought my ticket. The concert, one of the best concerts I've ever seen to this day, was almost three hours long!!!! Jazzers who look like rockers. My stereotyping of musicians based on their looks ended after this concert!!!
@user-ij5lc1kw8r7 ай бұрын
Good. But obligatory.
@rangelover80957 ай бұрын
Я в шоці 😮! Чудова банда!
@walar697 ай бұрын
Thank you
@rosimarrangeldeoliveira31267 ай бұрын
Acho a voz do Joe Anderson semelhante ao Demis Roussos! LINDAS
@rosimarrangeldeoliveira31267 ай бұрын
AMO MUSICA !
@thomasrichmond24138 ай бұрын
This is the only Metheny record I’ve bought or even heard. I loved every track ( well, exept Forward March-give me a break!) on this record and was afraid anything else would pale in comparison.
@heatherstub7 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh! No! You're missing so, so much more! I can't wait to see him in March here in Atlanta, and I've been following him since 1979. This man's music has been such an inspiration throughout most of my life, and I got the biggest shot in the arm the evening I attended his concert for the first time. I'd taken two years of music theory and wanted to take a stab at determining the rhythm of this amazing song. Now, being totally blind all my life, I learn everything by ear, so I had a go with it. My twin sister, Maggie was with me at the concert, and I needed a napkin or something to write down what I thought it was. Well, the ball point pen we were using teared into it, and this guy near us loaned us his felt-tip fountain pen. Thank God! So, with new napkin in hand, I asked her to write down 18/8, and she helped me sign it, so Pat could read it. We passed it down through the audience, and he got it. After finishing the set, he introduced all the songs he played, and picked up the napkin. Of course, Maggie got so excited, and I had to remind her that I might be off by a few beats. I was already nervous, but I figured that if I didn't take this opportunity, I'd kick myself for not doing it. Then, Pat called my name! I was weigh in the back, so I stood up. He asked me how sure was I that it was 18/8. I told him that I might be a few beats off, but I believed I was pretty close. I'd taken two years of music theory and wanted to do my best. He then told me that I'd come the closest to the actual rhythm and to give myself a pat on the back and that it was 22/8! He also encouraged me to follow this path I was on, because he could really see how much I love music. I'd always wanted to be a singer since I was six, but there were members of my family who were violently opposed to this. No matter what I told them, I couldn't convince them, and I never stopped singing. Music has been a lifeline for me, and Pat's influence and inspiration have lasted this long, and I've been to quite a few concerts since then. To tell the truth, I wouldn't have been able to get through this life without it, because I've struggled with debilitating chronic pain most of my life, and I can say I'm finally seeing the light at the end of that tunnel after 47 years with Trigeminal Neuralgia and other situations. I hope you have listened to more of Pat's music since you entered this comment, because it's helped so many people throughout their lives as well. He was even honored in 2018 by the Society for Neuroscience for his role in the creative process and for how music can have a profound affect on healing. It was they whom I contacted in 2006 when I was finally diagnosed with Trigeminal Neuralgia, because I had the most difficult type, and there were very few treatment options available at the time. After two neurosurgeries and years on pain meds, muscle relaxers and even neurotropic medications, I finally found infrared laser therapy and acupuncture. I'm off all the pain meds, but I can take Tylenol and Ibuprophen if I have breakthrough pain and facial spasms. All I can say is it's good to be alive!
@sandyboggs80998 ай бұрын
So good
@heatherstub8 ай бұрын
When I was first introduced to this song in 1983, I fell in love with it immediately! That October, The Pat Metheny Group came to Cafe 290 here in Sandy Springs, Georgia, (a suburb of Atlanta). I'd recently graduated high school with two years of AP (Advanced Placement) Music Theory and wanted to listen to it and get the time signature and rhythm. After "counting" it all out, I knew it was "something 8". By the concert evening, I believed I either had it or I was close. On a personal note, I've been totally blind all my life and learned music by ear, and Braille music was and still is expensive and very tedious, especially when it comes to Jazz and Latino-influenced music. That never stopped me. Back to that night; my twin sister accompanied me to the concert. After they played it, I asked for an extra napkin and asked Maggie, my sister, to write down 18/8 and to help me sign my name. At that point, we only had a ballpoint pen, and I didn't want to tare through the napkin. Someone loaned us his fountain pen, (plus a new napkin), so she wrote "18/8" and then helped me sign my name, so Pat could read it. We returned the fountain pen to the kind man who loaned us his and waited to see if Pat would notice it. Once that set of music ended, Maggie saw Pat pick up the napkin. At that instant, Maggie was so excited, saying: "He's got it; he's got it!" Now, I was trying to remain calm, but my heart was racing! Then Pat called out to me, asked me to stand up and be recognized. He then asked me how sure I was that it was 18/8. I told him that I might be close--maybe a few beats off. He told me I came closest to the rhythm and that it was 22/8 and to give myself "a pat on the back!" He then encouraged me to keep doing whatever I was doing, and "don't lose that dream! You've got this!" Needless to say, I was on cloud nine! What Pat must have intuitively known was that I had always wanted to be a singer. Music has always been a part of my life since I was an infant, but some members of my family were opposed to me having a music career of any kind. I was even threatened with disownment and even had an unexpected violent encounter with my dad that nearly ended my life! Now, my family knows that I don't take "no" for an answer, but more importantly, all is forgiven even before they realized it. I've been singing my whole life, because music really can heal even a broken soul and heart! It did mine, and I thank God for Pat Metheny's influence along with Lyle, Pedro, Paul and Steve Rodby. Yes, there are others to thank, too, and they've been contacted, and I even met Josh Groban. Now, if I could meet Pat after trying for nearly 42 years, tell him my story and hopefully, sing this amazing song, I'd be complete! At 59, I'm happy to say that I have no regrets, and I don't want or need any. Even through many years of severe, chronic pain and illness, I've never let go of my dream, even though there were some very dark times when I didn't even want to live. Whenever it got that bad, it was Pat's music that was and is like a true friend who's always there no matter what! It never judged me! I never felt left out, and most of all, I believe it was all God's doing through His most Holy Spirit, because He's the Chief Musician, as David the Psalmist says. If you listen to the soundtrack to "The Falcon and the Snowman," you'll hear it open with Psalm 121 or 120 in the Greek text of the Bible, and how appropriate it is! And for what it's worth, it is meant to be.